
Black History Month no longer stays limited to museum audio guides and framed photographs on gallery walls. Stories appear through soul food gatherings, cultural travel, festivals and live music where history can be tasted, heard and experienced firsthand. Throughout February, calendars fill with events that carry Black history into public spaces, keeping it shared and celebrated out in the open.
Photo credit: Depositphotos.
Away from static displays and scripted explanations, Black History Month teaches the past through modern-day rituals people can experience up close and in real time. African American cuisines preserve stories of resilience and hard-earned resourcefulness, while travel sites, community celebrations and creative spaces bring history out of the footnotes and back into public view.
The roots of Black History Month
Black History Month began as a focused effort to bring Black history into public awareness and education. In 1926, historian Carter G. Woodson launched what was then known as Negro History Week. He scheduled it in February to coincide with long-standing community observances tied to the birthdays of Abraham Lincoln and Frederick Douglass, both widely honored within Black communities for their roles in the fight against the system that kept people enslaved.
The idea drew on earlier momentum during the 50th anniversary of emancipation in 1915, gaining national attention that helped spark broader interest in the formal study of Black history. Woodson argued that Black history should be part of regular education, not an occasional topic. His organization developed lesson plans and teaching materials that schools could use during the February observance.
Over time, the weeklong focus expanded. Negro History Week grew into Black History Month and gained official recognition at the federal level through annual presidential proclamations. Today, the Association for the Study of African American Life and History, the same group Woodson founded, continues to support the observance, reinforcing Black history as an essential part of the American story rather than a separate one.
Cultural storytelling through food
Africans brought to the Americas arrived with farming knowledge and cooking practices that shaped regional food across the United States, the Caribbean and South America. Dishes tied to red beans and rice, East Coast oyster traditions and greens prepared with ham hocks trace those roots, alongside market trade led by enslaved women that created food-based paths to income across generations.
Black History Month events now bring these stories to light through public programs focused on food and culture. In the Richmond region, The History of Black Distillers and Brewers in America on Feb. 12, 2026, features Debra Freeman, who explores how race, culture and craft shaped American brewing and distilling traditions.
Another program, Soulful Flavors: A Black Diaspora Culinary Journey on Feb. 7, 2026, follows food traditions from West Africa to American soul food. Through guided tastings and storytelling, the event connects cuisine to identity, resilience and shared history in ways that extend well beyond museum walls.
Festivals bring culture outdoors
Black History Month celebrations increasingly move into public spaces through street festivals and neighborhood gatherings. Cities use outdoor events to combine history, visual arts and live performances while spotlighting local Black-owned businesses and working artists.
One example is the OWAMBE Festival, which will host its second annual festival in Mobile, Ala., on Feb. 6-7, 2026. The festival takes its name from a Yoruba term that describes a large celebration centered on food, music and dance.
This year’s program connects residents and visitors to the legacy of Africatown’s founders through curated performances and storytelling led by local artists. Their work preserves the history of the Clotilda, the last known ship to transport enslaved people from West Africa to the United States, through voices tied directly to the community.
History experienced on foot
Travel tied to Black history now centers on places where daily life and perseverance shaped entire communities. Guided trips move beyond monuments to focus on neighborhoods, streets and landscapes built and sustained by Black residents.
In Boston, the Black Heritage Trail offers ranger-led walks through Beacon Hill, tracing a thriving Black community from the early 1800s through the Civil War era. Homes, meeting spaces and churches along the route show how residents organized, worked and supported one another across generations.
Other destinations focus on acts of courage and collective memory. Many travelers stop at the Tom Lee Memorial, which honors Tom Lee for saving 32 people after a Mississippi River steamboat disaster in 1925. In New York, the Niagara Falls Underground Railroad Heritage Center presents stories of freedom-seeking and regional networks that supported those escaping enslavement. These sites turn travel into a way to engage with Black history through real places that continue to carry meaning.
Black history through music
Music plays a central role during Black History Month by carrying history into live settings. Concerts and listening events focus on styles shaped by Black artists, from jazz and gospel to blues and hip hop. These performances treat sound as shared memory, with songs that hold stories of community life, resistance and cultural change.
Let’s Groove Tonight on Feb. 20, 2026, in Richmond brings that approach to the stage, led by Chester Gregory with vocalists Cherise Coaches and Brik Liam. The program revisits classic hits made famous by Black artists, including work associated with The Spinners, The Stylistics, The Temptations, Marvin Gaye, Lou Rawls, Diana Ross and the songwriting team of Gamble & Huff.
History outside museum walls
Black History Month programming continues to reach people by meeting them where they already gather, not only where history is formally displayed. Food events, outdoor festivals, walking routes and live music create accessible entry points, especially for audiences who may not engage with museums on their own. By spreading history across everyday spaces, communities broaden participation and keep Black history alive and shared.
Mandy writes about food, home and the kind of everyday life that feels anything but ordinary. She has traveled extensively, and those experiences have shaped everything, from comforting meals to small lifestyle upgrades that make a big difference. You’ll find all her favorite recipes over at Hungry Cooks Kitchen.
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